This is every concussion in the NFL (that we know about) from this past week, collected in one place. This is what being concussed actually looks like.

For the second week in a row, the majority of reported NFL concussions came courtesy not of bone-jarring hits but instead the constant battering players take every game. Offensive linemen Shawn Lauvao and Matt Tobin played full games on Sunday but weren't diagnosed with concussions until later in the week. Vikings running back Matt Asiata didn't practice yesterday because of a concussion that no one saw happen. And Colts corner Greg Toler only reported headaches on Monday; his coach, Chuck Pagano, called the brain injury, "residual from the game." There were a few visible concussions in week 11 though, and they're below.

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Emmanuel Sanders, WR, Denver Broncos

This hit from Rams safety Joe McLeod was so hard that some wiseass thought it would be funny make Sanders' Wikipedia page say it killed him. It didn't. But the blow did force him to leave the game with a concussion. Sanders didn't practice Wednesday and is currently in the league's concussion protocol. In response to a tweet about whether he would have dusted himself off and re-entered the game after this massive hit, he tweeted, "No doubt!" And that is why the concussion protocol is a good thing.

Zach Strief, OT, New Orleans Saints

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An interesting thing we've learned doing this feature is that NFL broadcasts rarely show replays of lineman injuries. Take this play, on which right tackle Strief, number 64 at the top of the ohttps://admin.hearstmags.com/cm/esquire/images/H3/anthony-davis-concussion-compressor.gifffensive line, suffers a concussion. The 320-pounder is slow to get up after the play; the broadcast cuts to commercial, returns to show him walking into the locker room, and promptly returns to the game. Unlike hits like the one Sanders took above, which was replayed at least a half dozen times, this one wasn't shown again. For NFL broadcasters, if injuries aren't exciting it seems they just don't care about them.

Anthony Davis, OT, San Francisco 49ers

Watch the right tackle on this play. Davis, number 76, is blocking for quarterback Colin Kaepernick's run. He dives at an opponent's knees, rolls on the ground and then grabs his head. Davis would later say he was momentarily knocked out. A few hours after the game he tweeted, "I remember waking up to Harbaugh saying 'get him up and off the field!, We don't want the clock to stop!' lol Can't make this shit up." If that doesn't make you uncomfortable, this will: In reference to being knocked unconscious on the field of play, Davis tweeted, "I'm officially an NFL player now."